By 2023, organizations with a monolithic DXP will be outpaced by competition using composable by eighty percent in implementing new features on their platform according to a gated 2019 report by Gartner.
The necessity of integrating new platform functionalities, faster, will continue to increase with growing customer expectations.
Before moving to composable, you need answers to key questions:
Your search for answers to these questions ends here.
A monolithic DXP is somewhat similar to a traditional CMS, in which the front-end and backend layers are coupled. This system is made for powering a single digital channel like a mobile application or a website.
Most small and medium-sized businesses usually rely on monolithic DXPs as it was part of their existing tech stack, and they never bothered to swipe it out for a modern solution. Your organization might also fall within this bracket with the majority.
The main problem with monolithic stackos is that they create friction when implementing changes. This friction can exist because of the time it takes to implement every little change, cost requirements, and the resources required by the developers and QA teams to understand the entire stack. Testing also becomes harder to perform in monolithic stacks.
A composable DXP, on the other hand, is a digital experience platform that can bridge the gap between the digital experiences of different datasets in an organization like the customer, users, and employees. It removes the challenges posed by monolithic DXP and takes the customer experience to the next level.
Composable DXP gives you the freedom to connect multiple channels by using APIs. APIs can also be leveraged to connect new digital touchpoints vital for your business. DXP further brings content and data together seamlessly to provide a personalized experience to customers. Given these features, a composable DXP will work as the backbone of all your digital content and efforts if implemented correctly.
You will have the control to tailor it around your existing processes and infrastructure. Further, APIs and DXP integrations, as the building blocks, will allow you to deliver a high-quality digital experience to your customers as quickly as they need it. Other than understanding what is a composable DXP, you should also follow the DXP discovery process to figure out your DXP requirements.
You now know that monolithic DXPs come with a lot of limitations. And these limitations will only become more glaring with time as the number of digital channels and touchpoints for customer interactions grows.
With this, it’s important to listen to what your consumers say. According to a 2020 Deloitte study on customer behavior, 75% of consumers want consistent interactions across all departments. This is relevant because customers are accessing multiple touchpoints before making a purchase. Businesses need to remember that the digital experience that your brand creates can’t afford to miss the mark.
A monolithic DXP will not help you with this due to its many challenges. Thankfully, composable DXPs provide the right solution to most of those challenges.
| Monolithic DXP Limitations |
Composable DXP Solutions |
| Omnichannel Possibilities 🔗 |
|
| Starting Short: The primary problem with a monolithic DXP is that you are already starting short by opting for it in today’s digital environment. Because:
With a monolithic DXP, it will be quite difficult to keep up with these changes. |
Use of APIs: A composable DXP uses APIs to:
This allows you to meet the basic demand and excel by launching consistent campaigns that support digital experience on all platforms. |
| Improving Customer Experiences 👍 |
|
| Limited Capability: More often than not, Monolithic systems make it challenging to:
While the customer expects you to be swift and provide better experiences in real-time monolithic systems, if not designed well can limit businesses to take timely actions. |
Relevant Analytics & Reports: With composable DXPs, you can integrate analytics and reports relevant to your business with ease. This helps in:
Businesses that personalize their customer experience are able to grow. It is important to ask if your business falls in this category. |
| Ease of Development 👨💻 |
|
| Baked-In Rigidity: Monolithic DXPs tend to be a pain for modern developers to handle. This is because:
At the end of the day, this hinders the developers and pace of the project. |
Face Changes Head-On: You don’t have to be afraid of changes if you have a composable DXP to rely on. With composable DXP your business can:
With innovation happening at the speed of light, this allows your organization to always stay ahead of the competition. |
| Scalability📈 |
|
| Overloading: Businesses are always trying to grow bigger. Sadly, things might get overloaded as you add more:
With monolithic DXP, you will be left struggling to keep up with these changes. |
Ease of Scalability: A composable DXP allows you to respond to changes quickly. This will allow you to:
All of this can happen whenever there is a market opportunity. |
| Building The New 🛠 |
|
| Re-Platforming: Let’s consider that there will be a new customer channel tomorrow.
In all of these scenarios, you will have to re-platform if you have a monolithic DXP. |
Flexibility: With a composable DXP, you will be able to select the best tool for the job and your business. This means:
Ensure that your customers don’t choose your competitors over you simply because you lack the flexibility to respond to their needs. |
Starting Short:
The primary problem with a monolithic DXP is that you are already starting short by opting for it in today’s digital environment. Because:
With a monolithic DXP, it will be quite difficult to keep up with these changes.
Use of APIs:
A composable DXP uses APIs to:
This allows you to meet the basic demand and excel by launching consistent campaigns that support digital experience on all platforms.
Limited Capability:
More often than not, Monolithic systems make it challenging to:
While the customer expects you to be swift and provide better experiences in real-time monolithic systems, if not designed well can limit businesses to take timely actions.
Relevant Analytics & Reports:
With composable DXPs, you can integrate analytics and reports relevant to your business with ease. This helps in:
Businesses that personalize their customer experience are able to grow. It is important to ask if your business falls in this category.
Baked-In Rigidity:
Monolithic DXPs tend to be a pain for modern developers to handle. This is because:
At the end of the day, this hinders the developers and pace of the project.
Face Changes Head-On:
You don’t have to be afraid of changes if you have a composable DXP to rely on. With composable DXP your business can:
With innovation happening at the speed of light, this allows your organization to always stay ahead of the competition.
Overloading:
Businesses are always trying to grow bigger. Sadly, things might get overloaded as you add more:
With monolithic DXP, you will be left struggling to keep up with these changes.
Ease of Scalability:
A composable DXP allows you to respond to changes quickly. This will allow you to:
All of this can happen whenever there is a market opportunity.
Re-Platforming:
Let’s consider that there will be a new customer channel tomorrow.
In all of these scenarios, you will have to re-platform if you have a monolithic DXP.
Flexibility:
With a composable DXP, you will be able to select the best tool for the job and your business. This means:
Ensure that your customers don’t choose your competitors over you simply because you lack the flexibility to respond to their needs.
Start by answering the question: Do I Need A DXP? If you do, figure out a roadmap for moving from a monolithic to a composable structure. This becomes challenging with the realization that there is no “one” roadmap from a monolithic to a composable DXP.
Moving to composable isn’t so much a journey as it is a process of reconstruction. You have to break down the older system, over time, while simultaneously integrating pieces of what will become the new.
This reconstruction can only be successful if decision makers are focused on ensuring that the right people are involved, that your processes evolve, and that the right technologies are used.
Take advantage of digital product management that enables continuous delivery of exceptional services and innovation. Assess the ability of your business to meet your customers' rapid and increasing demand for integrated, personalized, and frictionless digital experiences.
The key point that you need to remember is that you don’t need everybody to know everything. Instead, you can have experts for different components. From having business stakeholders that are open to adopting modern technology to having the right blend of frontend developers, backend developers, quality analysts, and subject matter experts, everything is essential.
But what if you lack the right blend of people in your team? In that case, we at Axelerant can help you out. Book a consultation with us to know how we can help you reach higher digital maturity today!
The second step is adoption of multi-experience product delivery. Here, a shift in mentality from channel focused traditional model to one that encompasses the entire customer journey and delivers a seamless customer experience over various channels and platforms is required. The goal for this step should be to make the content more structured and granular for composable content delivery.
The three core components of a DXP are content management, personalization, and presentation. The movement towards modular DXPs that enable application composability is quite suited as the first step in your journey towards the future of a composable business.
The next step will involve enabling the composable UX in the evolution of DXP. Here, interfaces and experiences can be assembled by non-technical business users based on the end-user persona and their roles.
In this manner, evolved DXPs will have a special horizontal role that comprises experiences from multiple PBCs (Packaged Business Capabilities). It will also provide an Application Composition Platform (ACO), where the DXP will package the PBCs and provide a unified composable UX layer.
Tech plays an integral role in journeying from monolithic to composable DXP. There are several options available for organizations to choose from, including Drupal, Acquia, Salesforce, and Wordpress for their CMS, Acquia for CDP, and low-code/no-code site building can be done through Site Studio of Acquia, Gutenberg of Wordpress, and Layout Builder of Drupal.
When do you need to start making your digital experience platform composable? The short answer: the sooner the better.
The long answer: evaluate where your platform is now and where it needs to be in a few years. As technology changes rapidly, businesses that don’t prepare will be left behind.
How to begin? Nobody makes big digital change alone. There are many technical implementation partners that can help your organization move from monolithic to composable—and Axelerant is one of them.
Our technical teams implemented a composable DXP solution while consolidating digital experiences for 90+ brands for a retail megalith. The project was challenging—out of nearly 90 brands, some were on Drupal and others were on a mix of Open Source and proprietary CMSs. Not all had a web presence, and most brands only had physical stores. The ones with a web presence were missing eCommerce capabilities.
To speak with those who helped make this migration successful, schedule a call.